Welcome to The Mundane Adventures of a Fangirl

I consider myself a Fangirl. What does that mean, you ask? A "fanboy" in the most common understanding is a hardcore fan of 'genre' based entertainment in particular. In my case - science-fiction and comic book based movies and television. Because I'm a chick - it's fangirl, not fanboy. There you have it! I am a big movie fan, however, not necessarily a 'film' fan. And now - I have the forum to present my opinions to the public! These will mainly be movie reviews -that will always be my opinion - repeat OPINION. Just what I think, and in no way do I present my opinion as fact. I hope you enjoy and maybe it will help you decide what to see at the movie theater this weekend!

Tuesday, June 6, 2017

The Pirates of the Caribbean theme park ride opened in
Disneyland in California in 1967, and is still going today. Guests ride in a
boat along a waterway past animatronic pirates doing pirate-y things. If you go now, you can see all the places
they stuck in animatronic Johnny Depps after the success of the movie series. If you’re lucky, and you get on the ride
during a time when Depp is filming one of these pirate movies, you may get a
real Depp in your Pirates Ride.

In 2003, director Gore Verbinski teamed up with Johnny Depp,
and they released Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl – and
as skeptical as I was when the project was announced, I was really impressed
with the result. The movie was fun, looked amazing (the ILM effects on the
moonlight pirates was amazing!), and Captain Jack was unique and entertaining.

We then got two sequels that were tied together, Dead Man’s
Chest in 2006, and At World’s End in 2007.
The Davy Jones effects were great, but overall the movies lacked the
magic of the original.

In 2011, On Stranger Tides brought in Penelope Cruz and Ian
McShane to escort Captain Jack as he sought out the Fountain of Youth. This
movie involved a mermaid and a priest, but I really can’t remember much more
than that.

This movie reintroduces the situation of Will Turner from
the first three movies. He’s cursed to
spend his time captaining the Flying Dutchman after freeing Davy Jones from the
curse. That’s all well and good, but part
of his curse is that he can only see his wife and son once every 10 years.
Well, the son is not standing for that, and lets his father know that he will
get Poseidon’s trident to break the curse, because apparently it can break any
sea-curse. And you know there are a lot
of sea-curses out there.

After watching Henry inform his father of this as a young
boy – we jump forward to Henry being about 21, and working various ships in
order to study more and more of the sea and its legends. He and his new crew encounter
a ship full of dead pirates in the ‘Devil’s Triangle’, a shady area – literally
shady, the area is very cloudy. Captain
Salazar, the dead captain, finds that Henry is searching for Jack Sparrow to
help him free his father, and leaves Henry alive to pass a message to Jack: that he and his dead crew are coming for
him.

Henry ends up on St. Martin, and meets Carina Smyth – a
scientist who has been sentenced to death for witchcraft, because how dare a
woman science! Meanwhile, Captain Jack
happens to also be on St. Martin. He and what is left of his crew are
attempting to rob the bank. The crew
loses faith in Jack, and he stumbles around the town, eventually pawning his
compass for a drink which lets the dead pirates out of the triangle and free to
sail after Jack, since the compass was keeping them trapped?

Salazar and his crew encounter Captain Barbossa and his
fleet of ships – since Jack has come on hard times, Barbossa and his fleet of
pirate ships are running the seas. In an
act of self-preservation, Barbossa agrees to help Salazar find Jack, who has
started sailing with Henry and Carina to find the trident combining Henry’s
knowledge of sea stories with Carina’s book and science. Oh – and they are also being chased by the
British Navy, since they all escaped jail in St. Martin. Hijinks ensue.

This movie is directed by two Norwegian directors, Joachim
Ronning and Espen Sandberg (their likenesses are on the severed heads in the
basket when Jack is guillotine threatened). As with most of the movies in this
series – it looks beautiful. The ships,
costumes, and sets are all fabulous, and yes, the effects of the dead pirates
and their dead sharks are stunning. Yes,
you read that right, they have dead sharks – no, I don’t know why. The action set pieces are also pretty good –
in particular, the opening action sequence as Jack and his crew fail in robbing
the bank is really well done as they end up dragging the entire bank building
around the island while Jack mugs for the camera. The story is meandering, but that’s similar
to the last couple of these movies. The
cast is entertaining enough –

Johnny Depp once again plays Captain Jack Sparrow, and yes,
he’s great at it, and if you’re a fan of this character you’ll once again enjoy
him in this movie. If, however, like me,
you are growing a little tired of Depp and this character – he becomes more and
more annoying. They do digitally de-age him to show some very brief Captain
Jack backstory, which was actually pretty interesting.

Javier Bardem plays Captain Salazar, and he does a fine job
of being an angry dead guy only out for vengeance. Although, counter to the
title, he does tell several tales – he’s the one providing the most exposition.

Geoffrey Rush plays Captain Barbossa again, and really – he
may be the best part. He’s perfectly comfortable ruling the seas as a pirate
king, and shifts to protecting what he can when encountering Salazar. His very
sudden turn at the end of the movie relating to Carina was interesting, and
well done – but also very brief.

Brenton Thwaites, who was the ‘star’ of the very terrible
Gods of Egypt (you remember, that movie about Egyptian gods that had absolutely
zero Egyptian actors in it?), plays Henry, and he’s just fine here. He’s interesting
and engaging, and I think could move on to some action roles.

Kaya Scodelario plays Carina, and her character was new and
different, but not as well developed as it could have been. She also felt a little forced into the story
at the beginning. By the end she feels
like she fits in, which I suppose was the point.

Kevin McNally is back as Gibbs, and honestly, he’s the best
part of the lunacy that is Captain Jack. His double takes and more grounded
reactions help to sell the comedy of Jack.

David Wenham takes time off from harassing Danny Rand to
play the head of the pursuing British Navy, Scarfield. He has next to nothing
to do – but does what he can to chew the scenery he is presented with, which is
a good thing in this movie.

And yes, Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightly are back – so,
spoiler alert, Henry does break the curse at the end.

Overall, I liked it better than the previous installment,
but honestly – we don’t need any more of these.
I can just rewatch the original and be perfectly happy with that. I didn’t really care about any of the new
characters until it was too late, and the whole thing just seemed unnecessary
and a little boring.

5 out of 10, I got through this entire thing and didn’t make
one sea joke – time to remedy that. I would have given it a higher rating if
the meandering plot hadn’t felt so lost at sea, if the characters weren’t
drowning in exposition, and if the whole movie wasn’t such a shipwreck.

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About Me

I use my blog as an outlet for my rantings about movies and pop culture in general. This will spare my friends and family from my near-constant lecturing on the state of movies today, but will unleash that lecturing into the bloggosphere - sorry!
I can't promise to be entertaining, but I will certainly try to be.
I will promise movie reviews - and lots of them.
If you enjoy the blog - let me know!